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MENTOR/National Mentoring Partnership strongly supports a streamlined, more accessible means of conducting nationwide criminal background checks. By making it easier for mentoring programs and other youth-serving organizations to perform comprehensive checks on potential volunteers and employees, children will be better protected from child predators and other people that should not have access to children based on their criminal record. H.R. 5606 & S. 2756 would achieve these goals.
Organizations should understand that background checks are not the sole solution for preventing mistreatment of children, and are just one of many methods to help ensure the safety of children. A robust system of reference checks and interviews of potential volunteers, evaluation of risk, and ongoing monitoring should also be part of an organization's regular procedures.
Human service organizations rely on volunteers and employees to provide services and care to children. These individuals coach soccer games, mentor young people, run youth camps, and much more. Approximately 61 million adults currently volunteer, with 27% dedicating their volunteer service to education and youth programs.
By utilizing background checks, human service organizations can prevent hiring or utilizing a person with a criminal past that could endanger a child in their care. A look at crime statistics in the U.S. reveals the need for these types of record checks:
And, statistics from the existing PROTECT Act Child Safety Pilot testing screening of volunteers demonstrates the importance of a nationwide fingerprint-based FBI criminal background check:
The current system of obtaining a background check is just not working. Just one-third of states allow a range of youth-serving organizations to access FBI searches. And, even when those searches are available, they are often expensive and time-consuming.
Under current law, whether they want a state or FBI records check, organizations must apply through their state-authorized agency. The state agency performs the state check and requests that the FBI to perform the national check. The FBI responds to the state agency, which then passes the results back to the volunteer organization. This system has led to many problems:
The current system means that youth-serving organizations are often unable to access these important background checks, and run the risk of using volunteers or employees who should not have access to children.
Congress has previously attempted to ensure that states make FBI criminal history record checks available to organizations seeking to screen employees and volunteers who work with children, the elderly and disabled persons, through the National Child Protection Act and the Volunteers for Children Act. However, according to a report from the Attorney General, these laws “did not have the intended impact of broadening the availability of NCPA checks.”
Nearly five years ago, Congress created the PROTECT Act Child Safety Pilot. It has demonstrated that FBI fingerprint checks can be made available to organizations that work with children, in a timely manner and at a reasonable cost. Introduced by Senators Biden, Hatch, and Specter and Representatives Schiff and Rogers (MI), the Child Protection Improvements Act of 2008 (S. 2756 / H.R. 5606) would build on the lessons learned from the Child Safety Pilot to create a permanent, nationally-accessible background check solution for youth-serving organizations.
The bill would:
For more information, please contact Margo Pedroso, Senior Vice President of Public Policy, MENTOR/National Mentoring Partnership at mpedroso@mentoring.org or 703-224-2221.
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